Federal Politics

Defiant Julie Bishop hits back at Tony Abbott

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop at 9 Downing Street in London.

London: A defiant Julie Bishop has hit back at suggestions she was disloyal to former Prime Minister Tony Abbott saying she is elected Deputy Leader by the Liberal partyroom and her loyalty is to her colleagues and not the leader. 

Julie Bishop and British PM divided on Syria

British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has his tie straightened by his Australian counterpart Foreign Minister Julie ...

The last time Malcolm Turnbull spoke with one of the handful of world leaders Australia might consider among its closest friends, the verbal stoush that ensued ended up becoming a global story.

What is your Sunday worth now?

The restaurant industry failed to make a strong enough argument to convince the Fair Work Commission.

The time you spend working on a Sunday is still worth more than it is on a Saturday, but not as much as it was in the past, according to the Fair Work umpire.

Labor MPs call for recognition of Palestinian statehood

A Palestinian security force personnel holding a Palestinian flag celebrates while deployment near the Jewish settlement ...

A group of federal Labor MPs have urged Australian recognition of a Palestinian state, echoing the high-profile interventions of party elders ahead of Opposition Leader Bill Shorten's meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Australia Post chief Ahmed Fahour resigns

Australia Post CEO Ahmed Fahour.

Australia Post chief executive Ahmed Fahour - who was criticised by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull for his $5.6 million salary - has resigned from the job after seven years.

RBA's hands tied as wage growth hits new record low

The number of jobs rose by 13,500 in the month, but that was entirely due to growth in part time work, with full-time ...

Private-sector wage growth has slid to record low of just 1.8 per cent, throwing into doubt budget projections and confounding the Reserve Bank, which would prefer not to have to cut interest rates again and run the risk of reigniting house prices.